Everything is a prototype

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  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024

Комментарии • 530

  • @shaunboydmadethis
    @shaunboydmadethis  9 месяцев назад +3

    Thanks to Patiowell (@patiowellus) for sponsoring today's video. Get 16% off your Patiowell purchase using the code SBMT16. Visit bit.ly/3vchKk1 to check out their products or bit.ly/41KUmq8 to check out their metal sheds. They will also be running a New Years Sale starting on January 1st.

  • @dennisrogers1387
    @dennisrogers1387 9 месяцев назад +72

    split the lamp in half long wise behind the darker band, then space the top half and lower half far enough apart that your LEDs will be recessed so it looks smooth, this will also force the light to reflect off the center panel.. your art form is amazing, truly inspiring.. please keep pushing your designs.. thank you for all that you do.

    • @Fr0stbyte89
      @Fr0stbyte89 9 месяцев назад +9

      I immediately thought this and came to the comments to see if anyone else had the same idea. Great minds, am I right? 😅

    • @DickvanZanten
      @DickvanZanten 9 месяцев назад +3

      ​​@@Fr0stbyte89 Yep. I immediately thought " Rout a channel in the dark band for the LED and hey, presto!" Does the exact same thing.....

    • @jbbresers
      @jbbresers 9 месяцев назад +5

      Just commenting to boost this higher as I had the same thought. LED lights just look better when they are recessed into a channel and a router won't get into the curves so cutting the big piece in half and using the accent wood as a structural element to hold them together is the way to go.
      I would also consider using a blind dovetail or rebate joint at the top for the cross pieces to avoid using plugs but that's getting very fancy.
      Overall I love it.

    • @mrboics
      @mrboics 9 месяцев назад +1

      Yep. This is the way forward. Recess and indirect light for LEDs. Also ensure one uses enough density so that individual lights are not discernable.

    • @cdlong28
      @cdlong28 9 месяцев назад +1

      My original thought was to route a channel to recess the LEDs, partly because I thought there were multiple levels of strips and they wouldn't be the full depth of the wood, but this idea works too. You could split the inner layers of the bent lamination for the grooves on the ends. As they say, there's always more than one way to accomplish something.
      Also, I'm pretty sure white acrylic is a thing and would be easier than making an epoxy sheet.

  • @RealLex
    @RealLex 9 месяцев назад +55

    Despite you not liking the LED guts the view from almost every angle looks great! Well done Shaun!

  • @MarkFaasen
    @MarkFaasen 9 месяцев назад +13

    I highly recommend getting thin, self adhesive COB Led strips, and doing multiple loops across the inside. They are super pretty and even when you look at them directly, it looks like a continuous glowing string without any cables or fixtures etc.

    • @banjohat
      @banjohat 8 месяцев назад +1

      Came here to say this - COB strips!
      You have all the tools - so you could get the super thin ones (2.7mm) and use a router to make a groove for it on the inside. It will also fit nicely on the curved pieces.

    • @TheHamPimp
      @TheHamPimp 6 месяцев назад +1

      I concur. I'd go one step further and embed a thin aluminum channel for the COBs, and you could even put a frosted diffuser on them if you like. They make channel/diffuser kits that are only 3/8" deep, so that would look very trick! The aluminum would add some polish and help with heat.

  • @Wheel_Horse
    @Wheel_Horse 9 месяцев назад +14

    Caulking tip for you Shaun: Instead of 'dragging' the caulking tip, and having to go back and tool with your finger, instead, PUSH the tip along while applying the caulk. Watch carefully as you go and don't apply too much caulk. Practice with this technique a bit and you'll (almost) never have to tool a caulk joint again.

    • @Wheel_Horse
      @Wheel_Horse 9 месяцев назад

      @@GolfDropout Sorry, I don't have that ability. Would if I could though! It's pretty easy though, just push the caulk out ahead of the tip as you push the gun forward.

    • @Wheel_Horse
      @Wheel_Horse 9 месяцев назад

      @@GolfDropout Don't have the ability to do the video upload, sorry. Of course I can do the technique, been using it for decades. It's so easy though, it really doesn't need a video. Just push instead of drag!

    • @JBLewis
      @JBLewis 8 месяцев назад

      @@GolfDropout Checkout Modustrial Maker, he has a number of videos making molds for concrete but it's a similar process. He uses a ball-ended tool commonly using in cake decoration to form the fillet in the silicone.

  • @jaykepley5238
    @jaykepley5238 9 месяцев назад +28

    You're a great storyteller (and woodworker)! Happy holidays. I hope 2024 is a great year for you and your family.

  • @StuartGeers
    @StuartGeers 9 месяцев назад

    For the bonus points it's the best part, just look in your cup after you wake up.

  • @NikLindsey2050
    @NikLindsey2050 8 месяцев назад +1

    4:00 boiling a pot of water and then dunking the peices into the water makes the wood more flexible I had to do a project and I did this to make some curves
    5:48 if you scale this up a little bit you can turn it into a coffee table or a media table. Mabey next project idea?
    Also a possible way to make it so you can't see the lights is get some semi non see throught plexi glass or something of the sorts and glue it to the inside of it

  • @umranrc
    @umranrc 9 месяцев назад

    Just a thought... the exterior darker colored wood can be made into a bridge connecting a split horizontally the main fixture. Allow say an inch of recess clearance between the split section for fixing the led light strip. It'll be a cleaner built!

  • @christopherbennett6916
    @christopherbennett6916 6 месяцев назад

    Shaun I have a fix for this light fixture. Inside flat screen TVs there are sheets that cover the LEDs that backlight the screen. The sheets diffuse the light. If you installed a thin sill of sorts above and below the led stops you would now a piece in between the sills and would completely cover the LEDs on the long portions. You could probably do the same around the curves on the end of it was accordion folded then bowed. Just an idea I thought I’d suggest. Regardless the fixture came out amazing.

  • @chrisschurtz5254
    @chrisschurtz5254 8 месяцев назад

    Put a ledge on under the led light to hide it from eye sight and then place an angled reflective piece on the top edge of the epoxy to redirect the light more down word. Love the lamp.

  • @Turbo-426
    @Turbo-426 9 месяцев назад +9

    Great design as always Shaun.
    Although im suprised no one else has mentioned that you could of just bought a white sheet of arcrylic/perspex cut to size. Would have saved you hell of a lot of time, money and materials.

  • @SAWimp1
    @SAWimp1 8 месяцев назад

    acrylic panels make good diffusers and come with various attenuative values. also, they make flexible led channel, and most accept a cover for a nice neat look.

  • @edwardsimmons3721
    @edwardsimmons3721 8 месяцев назад

    As a You Tube fan, and fan of your content. Any project that has multiple components and techniques that are not seen everyday is awesome to watch.

  • @hemanths193
    @hemanths193 6 месяцев назад

    When I saw the design first, I thought the middle contrast oval ring is to strengthen the slot for led inside. So if you make a second version, you can create a lot inside and try to inlay the led strip. Design looks awesome!

  • @gerardlochmans589
    @gerardlochmans589 9 месяцев назад

    May I suggest the following.... de-montage the white epoxy panel ..plane the top edge really plane and sand as smooth as possible (by hand NOT with Your Mirka!) ..then place on this "edge" a strip of LED lighting ( check if the lighting needs more oumpf or not) ...when this gives You suffient light on the table, I am sure You can add an suteble enclosure for the nasty LED strip on top! The way this should work is by scattering light on the white pigment particals in the epoxy mass. Greetings from a retyred ophthalmist in the Netherlands🤓

  • @codylee2818
    @codylee2818 9 месяцев назад

    Your macro view of time concept is "lead time" or "cycle time" or "wall clock time" (depending on exactly what you're measuring) and is the best way of measuring your time.

  • @AlanTheBeast100
    @AlanTheBeast100 9 месяцев назад

    The light fixture looks like it should be in the David Lynch Dune movie. (This is a compliment).

  • @wedding_photography
    @wedding_photography 8 месяцев назад

    I think I know a good solution to your light issue. Make it glow from the inside. You make a similar epoxy panel, but completely transparent. You round the edges, then you sand-blast it, making the surface matte. Then you slice it in half length-wise, right in the middle. Which will give you two pieces each with a transparent long edge. That's where you make the LEDs shine. So you have two strips of LEDs: one shining up into the upper half, one shining down into the lower half. And the LED strips are in the middle, so they aren't visible.

  • @s0berlin
    @s0berlin 9 месяцев назад +1

    Rice or paper screen will help diffuse the light and hide the light components. White glue and then a little mist of water and it’ll tighten up the paper like a drum skin.

  • @jamesculpin9680
    @jamesculpin9680 9 месяцев назад +1

    You could swap out the epoxy panel for a light sheet or edge lit acrylic.
    Is a shame as it’s a lovely looking light. Could maybe also use a slimmer LED and set it into the wood instead of screwed to face. You should do a mark 2 build. Shows development and progress. Would be interesting to see

  • @abelincoln78
    @abelincoln78 9 месяцев назад

    If the center panel were two pieces of etched acrylic with polished edges you could have built a seat for the acrylic to nest into with edge lights pointing both down and up. If your acrylic was thick enough you could probably drill a hole in the top side down to the center connection and maybe get away with it.

  • @sandilemabaso9001
    @sandilemabaso9001 8 месяцев назад

    This is wonderful. Congratulations.

  • @donnygrahambuilds
    @donnygrahambuilds 8 месяцев назад

    The design on this piece is awesome! To be such a small component of the overall process, that inside chamfer detail really adds a lot. The video itself was also really well executed, timing, flow, and overall entertainment value - it was all there. Solid work m'man!

  • @Lucas-vd2gx
    @Lucas-vd2gx 7 месяцев назад

    Another fix would be an inner ring from that same white plexi piece you have, wide enough to cover the wires, if you look from below you would just see a white ring. Might even help to reflect light.

  • @ConbustibleMonkey
    @ConbustibleMonkey 9 месяцев назад +2

    You could totally recess those lights inside the shade, on the inside of the strip wrapped around the shade. Cut a groove all the way around, sink the lights in, maybe put a bit of an interior shelf under them to hide them even more, done!

    • @catgynt9148
      @catgynt9148 9 месяцев назад

      Replacing the aluminum channel with a routed channel in the inner surface of the shade should eliminate some of your issues. Many contemporary LED lighting strips are supplied on spools similar to magnetic tape reels. The radius of the spools are significantly smaller than the radius of your laminated ends. The only reason to use the aluminum channels on straight sections would be to augment heat dissipation.

  • @4legdfishman
    @4legdfishman 9 месяцев назад

    It looks amazing! I know how you feel about the light strip, but it is just a prototype. A beautiful prototype! Thanks for sharing your talents.

  • @SideKickStudios
    @SideKickStudios 7 месяцев назад

    A beautiful light fixture! I work with LEDs daily, so i would say first, always recess your strips, secondly, for indoor use, you don't need the silicone or rubber covered strips, those are designed for outdoor use, for splash protection etc. Indoors, you can go with plain strips, they are thinner and also, to plug them up, solder your leads using finer cable. You can also use LED channels in your recesses to add your diffusion cover.
    Overall, a great end product, just minor adjustments needed, which you can technically do (minus the recess). I would replace the bulky strips with the thinner ones and replace the plastic channels with nice aluminium ones for cleaner aesthetics, so even if you look inside, it still looks sophisticated 😊

  • @BuiltKnotBought
    @BuiltKnotBought 9 месяцев назад

    Shaun you've outdone yourself with this light! Amazing work dude

  • @kz65g9
    @kz65g9 8 месяцев назад

    Dude!!! That is an awesome piece of light furniture fixture. Thanks for showing it. You just gave me the idea I was looking for.

  • @AcrimoniousMirth
    @AcrimoniousMirth 8 месяцев назад

    You can get flexible sealed LED tubes which are 10mm deep and 5mm wide and very bright, we use them on our yachts. Make a groove round the inside and place the light there. Personally what I’d do is once the main curved “pill” is made, cut it down the middle so you have two pills. The accent piece bridges the cut, which you space out by 5mm for the LED strip, and provides the structure to hold it all together.

  • @adamnelson4050
    @adamnelson4050 9 месяцев назад +5

    I am always looking forward to your videos. Thank you for the excellent content.

  • @boxworker
    @boxworker 8 месяцев назад

    The best part of waking up ☕️ 16:50

  • @ungoodwoodworker
    @ungoodwoodworker 9 месяцев назад +1

    Bent laminations from resawn boards is such an incredible medium to create from. Love it.

  • @DavZell
    @DavZell 9 месяцев назад

    Some quuarter round under/above the light strips would hide them a bit on the straightaways. It would give them an inset-type appearance.

  • @fegheaizdrea1638
    @fegheaizdrea1638 7 месяцев назад

    I love that dacia you have overthere. We own 2 at this point plus their electric one 2023!

  • @cam-asherbond5316
    @cam-asherbond5316 9 месяцев назад

    Dude, you laying down at the end absolutely sent me 😂 Well done though. Wires suck, sorry about that bit -but the design is so strong.

  • @NewNormac
    @NewNormac 9 месяцев назад +92

    Felt potential disaster awaiting as soon as the project idea was presented, immediately I questioned “how is Shaun ever gonna lay on a light?“ ~Smile oN

  • @sygad1
    @sygad1 8 месяцев назад

    I would love a part 2 where the concealment of hte LED was designed in from the start, there's a bunch of ways it can be done

  • @kypass
    @kypass 9 месяцев назад

    The best part of waking up is Folders in your cup🎵🎶

  • @eugenelasartemay1899
    @eugenelasartemay1899 7 месяцев назад

    I think you did a great job on the light fixture. Now, this is just my thought. I would recommend you add a brass polished shelf just big enough lay the LED on and allow the light to hit the light panel. The reason for brass and not the black tubing is to give the light another surface to reflect off of.

  • @AngelLuisTrinidad
    @AngelLuisTrinidad 9 месяцев назад +1

    Don't hate on it, It's beautiful and excellently made. By the way, not everything can be priced by the time it took you to make. In that note, how much time it took to paint the Monalisa? So, the next time somebody ask you how much time it takes you to make something, tell them that you're not making a product, you're making art.

  • @efenili
    @efenili 9 месяцев назад +3

    I feel like a recessed more bare bones LED strip would have done the trick here pretty easily. Once you started assembly without a channel though I definitely had some questions :)
    Either way its a great piece and thanks for sharing!

  • @joseescoto9069
    @joseescoto9069 9 месяцев назад

    Shaun I noticed you have some hand planes in the background. However I don’t see you use them often. How about a video walking us through your shop and the new additions

    • @shaunboydmadethis
      @shaunboydmadethis  8 месяцев назад

      Yeah, they are mostly wall decoration, except for the occasional use. Probably wouldn't do a video about that stuff here, but it's definitely something I would post on my Patreon.

  • @anonymousseven2491
    @anonymousseven2491 9 месяцев назад

    too humble, for what its worth, I think it looks amazing. Great job

  • @T-Fyre
    @T-Fyre 9 месяцев назад +1

    So my thoughts on the visible LEDs, first you probably could've gone with cheaper LEDs that don't have all that clunky waterproofing, just the FCB and chips, then while assembling the entire thing before you ratcheted it all together, cut a groove along the inside where the accent band is to nest the LEDs inside of, so they don't stick out as much, then you could use a cheap flexible diffusion channel's cover to diffuse the LED's, and run another notch up the inside in the middle and use the middle support rod for the transparent sheet to run cables from, assuming that's not incorporated in the other two suspension cables, the only downside is you'd be able to see the hot-spots of the LEDs through the diffusion layer, unless you get a strip with a high enough density of LEDs

  • @jewdd1989
    @jewdd1989 8 месяцев назад

    Beautiful light, regardless if the lights show, etc. it’s like a mid mod rectangular lamp which is ridiculously long for a name but I enjoy the curved edges and just learning how you did it all. When you showed the reveal, first off the semi transparent white epoxy panel worked very well, secondly I wonder if prior to assembly with wood glue and all of you routed a dado or groove to inset the leds if that’d be better and some way to hide it better would be pouring a very thin strip panel to sit directly onto the leds. In fact you could remove the bigger panel all together and make a screen to set over the leds themselves like you can buy semi transparent filters. The one bummer is that the light obviously can’t go through the hardwood, this build and light reminds me somewhat of what Pask Makes built a year or so ago. His was a large circle that he routed by hand every little squiggle shape to allow light to shine through and it’s gorgeous! So many possibilities and options but if I were facing your dilemma myself I’d go that route. Or embrace the light as a specific purpose light like for a desk when the light really needs to hover above a desk for ie. And about the shed, I’d love to get the metal version, my concern is the area I live in produces winds 40+ and consistently. Doesn’t sound bad at 40mph but it always gets more severe sometimes up to 70-80 mph and we get dust storms from the drought and again seems to never stop blowing. I’d be afraid of that thing lifting away but I’ll have to check out their products and see if I could I mount it to a concrete base or something. I should build my own damn traditional shed but like you mentioned… time is a factor and I’m not fast at building. I tend to stall, become indecisive, over research all possibilities but eventually finish a build and it’s well made and beautiful but obnoxiously overthought and I’m afraid I’d do the same thing with a shed. Anyone else struggle with time lines and procrastination? Most frustrating quality to have lol

  • @timdoyon1964
    @timdoyon1964 9 месяцев назад

    It’s a classic, (and very classy), pool table light” that you are building to put above a dining room table.

    • @shaunboydmadethis
      @shaunboydmadethis  9 месяцев назад

      Haha, I had the exact same thought when I was designing it!

  • @FlatLanderTech
    @FlatLanderTech 6 месяцев назад

    Great vid! Actually quite a beautiful piece you made!

  • @nmlackritz
    @nmlackritz 7 месяцев назад

    Love this piece. Couple of questions.... (1) About what radius were the bends? (2) About how thin were the laminations?

  • @SeaFanStudio
    @SeaFanStudio 9 месяцев назад

    The light turned out great Shaun! While you might not be able to iterate on this design, another great aspect of making RUclips videos is that someone else seeing it might iterate on your design and post a video of it that you get to watch. Thanks for sharing!

  • @alexandreguillard8792
    @alexandreguillard8792 8 месяцев назад

    I would have gone for a more transparent panel in the middle; as for the light a grove inside to recess the LED strip would have been fine
    Anyway nice looking light fixtures 👍🏻

  • @markgambrill
    @markgambrill 8 месяцев назад

    I have a similar design I've been developing in my head for the last few years (plus a handful of sketches). It's great to see it come to life and gives me more motivation to get it done.

  • @Shaggydishi
    @Shaggydishi 9 месяцев назад

    You could route a channel in the wood and put the LED strip in covered by a difuser, that should hide it nicely

  • @robandsharonseddon-smith5216
    @robandsharonseddon-smith5216 9 месяцев назад

    Classic woodworker problem. No one else will ever notice.

  • @elzacreatif7511
    @elzacreatif7511 9 месяцев назад

    This is a very quite really great looking prototype.

  • @geoffreymills9932
    @geoffreymills9932 8 месяцев назад

    I think it's a great looking fixture,, any light is going to have wires and being that particular about it is undue stress over something that just has to be, I didn't see any wire going to the ceiling so I'm calling it a win, nice job and great design, I might be building one myself

  • @Ernzt8
    @Ernzt8 9 месяцев назад

    I really like this design and the resin part is very original. If you ever want to continue with this design, why not find a way to sink in the LED strip in the middle at the thickened part of the wood.

  • @ryanroepke9933
    @ryanroepke9933 8 месяцев назад

    Shaun,
    First off, I love the design and execution of the bent wood and the contrasting epoxy reflector of the light. (whether it be a chandelier or pendant or whatever) From the light component standpoint I would have to agree, on the thicker strip lights do look pretty $#*^y. I ran into a similar issue when trying to conceal an led strip light in a wood channel above my work from home desk and had success with Feit brand Onesync "Tape Lights'". The strips are thinner, more flexible and easier to conceal than a lot of strip lights. They may be worth a look.? Anyway, thanks for finishing the project and posting this video even though the final look wasn't exactly what you had hoped.
    Cheers,
    Ryan

  • @JBLewis
    @JBLewis 8 месяцев назад

    I think there are definitely less bulky, more flexible LED strips out there that would give you the opportunity to recess the strips in the wood. Perhaps something low voltage so the wires coming down from the ceiling into the fixture could be smaller, and the transformer could be hidden in the celling like LED puck lights use.

  • @RelaxingRestoration
    @RelaxingRestoration 9 месяцев назад +1

    You should start another channel where you read books outloud :) I love your voice and story telling!

    • @shaunboydmadethis
      @shaunboydmadethis  9 месяцев назад +1

      Happy to hear that, because like most people, I hate the way my voice sounds.

  • @GreyJediCode
    @GreyJediCode 9 месяцев назад +1

    Quick hack - Paint the inside brilliant white it will give more reflection and would better hide the strip

  • @UpcycleFab
    @UpcycleFab 9 месяцев назад

    I LOVE the techniques and craftsmanship used to make this light. LED’s can be tricky…but there are some really thin strips that will give you lots of options. I would love to see this with a full spectrum light with colors. Great job!

    • @shaunboydmadethis
      @shaunboydmadethis  9 месяцев назад

      I honestly didn't realize how thick this light strip was when I bought it. I've used the thin ones before, but figured I would try something a bit "nicer". Thanks for watching!

  • @waguchan2414
    @waguchan2414 9 месяцев назад

    I think this is my favorite one of your builds. It doesn't look like a prototype. I also love how you used the first curved piece to make the accent curved pieces fit exactly.

  • @ChrisVenoy
    @ChrisVenoy 9 месяцев назад

    Pool hall lights is what we call them. Very cool video

  • @rnorwood2815
    @rnorwood2815 9 месяцев назад

    I was waiting to see just how in the heck you were going to lie on that thing and what you did was nothing short of EPIC. Love the light and would love to see more builds like this.

  • @crzyworm623
    @crzyworm623 8 месяцев назад

    Really cool design.. i like it

  • @kenmaira
    @kenmaira 8 месяцев назад

    Love the light, super sleek. If you want to hide away those wires, just add a piece of rice paper as a diffuser, and you'll never see it!

  • @delxinogaming6046
    @delxinogaming6046 9 месяцев назад

    Just add a semitransparent acrylic oval below the light strip

  • @handlesarestupid1234
    @handlesarestupid1234 9 месяцев назад

    Love the look. Maybe make some opaque diffuser panels to go horizontally across the top and bottom so that the light shines through but you can’t see the LED strips and wiring inside?

  • @dancarrier2378
    @dancarrier2378 9 месяцев назад

    would have been cool if that contrasting accent piece was spaced out and had light behind it as well.

  • @orvh5223
    @orvh5223 9 месяцев назад

    wow that light fixture looks great!
    I sure appreciate your comments about building "prototypes" . Feel like I've only ever done that. .. and yes .. v2 would be better ..lol

  • @ageofgrifter
    @ageofgrifter 8 месяцев назад

    I would have put in a horizontal white semi-translucent diffuser from below right under the wiring. From the outside the white central panel would still float.

  • @rackbites
    @rackbites 6 месяцев назад

    Recess the LEDs inside the wood with covered slot connecting them would solve that ... nice light thingy BTW.

  • @Hiksan5
    @Hiksan5 9 месяцев назад +1

    As a designer photographer, I can attest that designing good lightfixtures is difficult. SO much has to work at the same time. It needs to look good, be practical, preferably have fairly standard electrical parts, not be too heavy, be easy to mount - and lastly give off good light.
    I feel that you have delivered on most of these parameters, especially considering that this is a one off prototype.
    Something that we dont see a lot among RUclips woodworkers is quick prototyping in cheap+quick materials. Perhaps a few mockups in cardbord etc could have sorted out the minor errors.
    Good works a allways. Especially appreciate you sharing your design process and considerations that led to that specific design, this makes these videos so much more than just a guy in a garge making a random thing

    • @shaunboydmadethis
      @shaunboydmadethis  9 месяцев назад +1

      For sure, adding together all of those things is a trick! Thanks for watching!

  • @meeker03
    @meeker03 9 месяцев назад +1

    As a protype this is amazing. I would be insanely proud of this if I were you. Congrats on another excellent video. FYI... COB LED light strip would have been the way to go. And as someone else mentioned you could have cut a channel on the inside to better hide the light tape. Man I hope there is a next time for a light fixture for you.

    • @shaunboydmadethis
      @shaunboydmadethis  9 месяцев назад

      Really appreciate it! Yep, that's definitely how I would do it if I were to make another one. We'll see!

  • @swedishdad
    @swedishdad 8 месяцев назад

    Could try using the diffuser panel from a large LCD display eg. from a monitor or TV.

  • @dwayneattard5265
    @dwayneattard5265 9 месяцев назад

    Shaun try cutting a channel in the epoxy and place the LED strip in there facing the epoxy

  • @BuzzCarrick70
    @BuzzCarrick70 9 месяцев назад

    Might make a great pool table light, where it would hang closer to the table.

  • @70122riley
    @70122riley 9 месяцев назад

    My first thought for addressing the hardware/wiring was a white epoxy cable channel so that the light still gets diffused through it and it matches the middle panel

    • @shaunboydmadethis
      @shaunboydmadethis  9 месяцев назад +1

      That's a good idea!

    • @70122riley
      @70122riley 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@shaunboydmadethis thanks! I can't think of how to form or fasten it, but that's a problem for version 2.0

  • @johnqsak
    @johnqsak 5 месяцев назад

    9:37 Me Waiting for those Gloves or shirt edge to get caught in the bandsaw. 😲😲 Definitely skipped safety class

  • @ianwright308
    @ianwright308 8 месяцев назад

    Superb... I would make a recess where the outer rim is, and setting in the LED strips with a diffuse cover. It would look awesome. :)

  • @Deandsmcarpentry1
    @Deandsmcarpentry1 9 месяцев назад

    Lovely looking light it really gose well witht the table below

  • @toadsprocket7598
    @toadsprocket7598 9 месяцев назад

    nice Shaun love this thing, probably going to make 2 in 2 sizes for my kitchen and dinning room. I have an idea for hiding the light source and wiring. If I actually do it ill send you some pics.

  • @barryshrives
    @barryshrives 8 месяцев назад

    Just router a rebate for the led strip I’ve done it that way for years
    It works just fine

  • @vdis
    @vdis 9 месяцев назад

    4:45 That actually worked? Genuine surprise 😮

  • @stuff6218
    @stuff6218 9 месяцев назад

    Light diffuser tracks routed into the long parts (pre-assembly) I guess? Still looks bloody great though.

  • @iuliancalin22
    @iuliancalin22 9 месяцев назад

    you should have added the led light into the resin, that way the light would just blend the white part of the led strip

  • @noahalbrectsen5401
    @noahalbrectsen5401 8 месяцев назад

    This reminded me of Poul Henningsen's lamps - same base concept of not being able to see the light source, and he made some iconic lamps from it (ph lamps) - - just to say well done, and I think it would be interesting to see further iterations on this design!

  • @Poundy
    @Poundy 8 месяцев назад

    I agree, I say the small downside of the view of the LED strip and fixings and power are a small price to pay for the piece.

  • @5ElementsWoodworking
    @5ElementsWoodworking 9 месяцев назад

    Hiding the ugly....I stress over that too. Maybe for this, instead of screwing through the side into your epoxy support posts(?), rods(?), you make a ledge for them to sit on the same thickness as your led strip, and attach straight down through the rod into the ledge? You can put a strip/ledge on the bottom to hide the ugly when looking up. I mean, it won't completely hide the ugly, but a little trim goes a long way. But the design is great, and looks beautiful!

  • @alejandrolemmo
    @alejandrolemmo 9 месяцев назад

    I think it looks amazing! Probably you already knew this but why didn't you use the accent piece in the middle to embed the led light so they would be flush with the inside wall? That would be for version 2 of this lamp.

  • @jaakkopontinen
    @jaakkopontinen 8 месяцев назад

    16:44 Kinda sounds like one of the Baby Shark brand songs. It's got like a "Dance to the beat do-doo do-doo" part to it.

  • @Line-vw5io
    @Line-vw5io 9 месяцев назад

    maybe it's the part of the world you live in, leds in Europe comes in a much more smaler versions.
    I would have tried to put the led strip upside down, on the headside of the epoxy, or just put inside the epoxy some ware halfway. (pore the epoxy over the led)
    Love the channel

  • @zilitron2k
    @zilitron2k 8 месяцев назад

    The best part of waking up is Folgers in ur cup!

  • @hunnybunnysheavymetalmusic6542
    @hunnybunnysheavymetalmusic6542 9 месяцев назад

    HEY!!!
    BOYDS ARE PART OF MAH FAMULEE!!!
    EXCELLENT!!!

  • @craiglyons3975
    @craiglyons3975 9 месяцев назад +1

    Great build Shaun. Welcome back. I agree with what GWAIHIRKV suggested as well as maybe a floating valence around the light apparatus. Just an idea. Again, keep up the great work Shaun.

  • @fredneethling6382
    @fredneethling6382 9 месяцев назад

    Love the VW Caddy in the background

  • @YoungbloodFamilyFarm
    @YoungbloodFamilyFarm 9 месяцев назад

    Well done, thanks for sharing

  • @somryein
    @somryein 9 месяцев назад

    great project and process. was just going to say that corian might be a great material for the center panel. it looks great and has a slight translucency to it.